Object-Oriented Programming
Static variables don’t belong to any objects. Static methods are not
invoked on objects.An inner class is a nonstatic nested class. Its instances have a reference to the object of the enclosing class that constructed it.
You can never write a method that updates primitive type parameters.
Default Initialization
Instance variable is automatically set to a default value: numbers to 0,boolean values to false,and object references to null.
In this regard,instance variables are very different from local variables. Recall that
you must always explicitly initialize local variable
Static Variables and Methods
Since static methods don’t operate on objects,you cannot access instance variables from a static method. However,static methods can access the static variables in their class
Packages
It is a good idea to run javac with the -d option. Then the class files are generated in a separate directory,without cluttering up the source tree,and they have the correct subdirectory structure.
A source file can contain multiple classes,but at most one of them can be declared public. If a source file has a public class,its name must match the class name.
Nested and Inner Classes
Nested Classes
Use a static nested class when the instances of the nested class don’t
need to know to which instance of the enclosing class they belong. Use an inner class only
if this information is important.
public class Invoice {
private static class Item { // Item is nested inside Invoice
String description;
int quantity;
double unitPrice;
double price() { return quantity * unitPrice; }
}
private ArrayList- items = new ArrayList<>();
…
}
There is nothing special about the Item class,except for access control.
If you change the keyword private into public,there is essentially no difference between this Invoice.Item class and a class InvoiceItem declared outside any other class.
Nesting the class just makes it obvIoUs that the Item class represents items in an invoice.
Inner Classes
public class Network {
public class Member {
…
public void leave() {
members.remove(this);
}
}
private ArrayList members;
…
}
A method of an inner class can access instance variables and methods of its outer class. In this case,they are the instance variables of the outer class object that created it
Comments
//TODO